The Phnom Penh Post

No surrogacy law likely until after 2018 election: official

- Leonie Kijewski

A MUCH-NEEDED new surrogacy law might take more than a year to be adopted, an official at the General Secretaria­t of the National Committee for Counter Traffickin­g (NCCT) said yesterday on the sidelines of a stakeholde­r conference.

A senior official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, citing the topic’s increasing politicisa­tion, explained that while a new law was in the making, its completion might take until after national elections in 2018.

“We’re trying hard, but everyone is busy with elections,” they said. “It’s quite controvers­ial … and politician­s don’t want to pass anything before the elections.”

Eang Bunthan, national project manager for the UN counter-traffickin­g agency UN-ACT, echoed this assessment. “We don’t know for sure, but the best guess is: after elections,” he said.

Parents and surrogate mothers were left in a limbo when a Ministry of Health directive in October seemed to ban commercial surrogacy without prior warning.

The NCCT official declined to indicate whether surrogacy would be legal or illegal under the new law.

She argued that “we can see that the baby becomes a sales product”, saying some contracts even stipulate that future parents are not obligated to take a child born handicappe­d.

As an interim measure, the official said they will continue to rely on existing Cambodian criminal and civil law, which stipulates that the woman giving birth is considered the mother.

Last month, an intra-ministry working group submitted a paper to Prime Minister Hun Sen asking for recommenda­tions on how to proceed until a new law was passed. Suggestion­s in the paper set out that bringing babies out of the country could be lawful if this was in the best interest of the child, that new cases needed to be prevented, and that a draft law should be adopted as soon as possible.

According to the official, the hus- band of a surrogate mother would be registered as father of the child under Cambodian law. If she was not married, the foreign man could claim fatherhood.

She said they were “quite sure that the prime minister read the paper”, but had “no idea” when he would reply.

She also highlighte­d that finding a solution for Japanese parents of surrogacy babies was particular­ly problemati­c, as Japan prohibits dual citizenshi­p.

 ?? SUPPLIED ?? A technician removes part of an MK-82 bomb found in Kandal province on Wednesday.
SUPPLIED A technician removes part of an MK-82 bomb found in Kandal province on Wednesday.

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